4.7 Article

APP Genetic Deficiency Alters Intracellular Ca2+Homeostasis and Delays Axonal Degeneration in Dorsal Root Ganglion Sensory Neurons

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 35, Pages 6680-6691

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0162-22.2022

Keywords

APP; calcium; degeneration; development; DRG; NGF

Categories

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [38942]

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This study reveals the pro-degenerative role of APP in the development of the sensory nervous system during development and highlights its importance in the regulation of calcium signaling in sensory neurons.
The activation of self-destructive cellular programs helps sculpt the nervous system during development, but the molecular mechanisms used are not fully understood. Prior studies have investigated the role of the APP in the developmental degeneration of sensory neurons with contradictory results. In this work, we sought to elucidate the impact of APP deletion in the development of the sensory nervous system in vivo and in vitro. Our in vivo data show an increase in the number of sciatic nerve axons in adult male and female APP-null mice, consistent with the hypothesis that APP plays a pro-degenerative role in the development of peripheral axons. In vitro, we show that genetic deletion of APP delays axonal degeneration triggered by nerve growth factor deprivation, indicating that APP does play a pro-degenerative role. Interestingly, APP depletion does not affect caspase-3 levels but significantly attenuates the rise of axoplasmic Ca2+ that occurs during degeneration. We examined intracellular Ca2+ mechanisms that could be involved and found that APP-null DRG neurons had increased Ca2+ levels within the endoplasmic reticulum and enhanced store-operated Ca2+ entry. We also observed that DRG axons lacking APP have more mitochondria than their WT counterparts, but these display a lower mitochondrial membrane potential. Finally, we present evidence that APP deficiency causes an increase in mitochondrial Ca2+ buffering capacity. Our results support the hypothesis that APP plays a pro-degenerative role in the developmental degeneration of DRG sensory neurons, and unveil the importance of APP in the regulation of calcium signaling in sensory neurons.

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